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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (257521)10/29/2005 3:12:24 PM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1573092
 
A Prosecutor's Focus Shifted to a Cover-Up
By TODD S. PURDUM
WASHINGTON, Oct. 28 - The capital stopped in its tracks on Friday to watch a trim, plain, soft-spoken prosecutor whose voice it had barely heard in two years call the most important aide to the most powerful vice president in American history a liar. Politely, calmly, but firmly - and over and over again.

The prosecutor, Patrick J. Fitzgerald, brought no charges on the issue that prompted his investigation: whether someone in the government committed a crime by leaking the classified C.I.A. identity of the wife of one of the sharpest critics of the administration's rationale for war with Iraq. But he offered renewed evidence of that oldest of Washington axioms: the cover-up is always worse than the crime.

In an hourlong, live television news conference, Mr. Fitzgerald said that Vice President Dick Cheney's chief of staff, I. Lewis Libby Jr., had repeatedly told F.B.I. agents, and later a federal grand jury, that he was "just passing gossip from one reporter to another at the end of a long chain of phone calls" about the identity of the agent, Valerie Wilson. "It would be a compelling story that would lead the F.B.I. to go away," Mr. Fitzgerald said. "If only it were true."

It was as if Mr. Fitzgerald had suddenly morphed from the ominous star of a long-running silent movie into a sympathetic echo of Kevin Costner in "The Untouchables." And Mr. Libby's sworn testimony that he had learned of Ms. Wilson's identity from reporters suddenly seemed to spring from the same confidence that they would never contradict him that led Bill Clinton to assume that Monica S. Lewinsky had not saved evidence of their affair.

"We didn't get the straight story," Mr. Fitzgerald said, explaining his hitherto secret investigation and sometimes inscrutable moves. "And we had to - had to - take action."

As Mr. Fitzgerald spoke from the Justice Department, the cable television networks showed only mute, miniature split-screen images of counterprogrammed live speeches by Mr. Bush at the White House and Mr. Cheney in Savannah, Ga. Mr. Bush had begun the day by leaving the jurisdiction, for a speech in Norfolk, Va., in which he thanked his audience "for the chance to get out of Washington."

He ended it with a terse, angry-looking expression of regret at Mr. Libby's resignation, standing on the South Lawn of the White House, just yards from the spot where Mr. Clinton spoke defiantly on the day of his impeachment. Mr. Bush then joined his failed Supreme Court nominee, Harriet E. Miers, for the helicopter flight to Camp David for the weekend.

Ms. Wilson's husband, Joseph C. Wilson IV, a former ambassador who cast doubt on the administration's prewar assertion that Iraq had tried to buy uranium from Niger, did not get his wish to see Mr. Bush's chief political aide, Karl Rove, "frog-marched" from the White House. Mr. Fitzgerald brought no charges against him. But the investigation is continuing, preventing the president from being able to put the matter behind him.

"This keeps it hanging over their heads," said one senior official from a past Republican White House, speaking on the condition of anonymity so as not to quarrel publicly with Mr. Bush. "He needs to start anew. Now is the time to start anew. But I see no sign that they're going to."

And Mr. Fitzgerald's unvarnished charges that Mr. Libby lied repeatedly about his knowledge of Ms. Wilson's role (when Mr. Cheney was one of those who told him most explicitly that she was involved in counterproliferation work at the C.I.A.) kept alive questions about whether the administration misled Congress and the public with its original rationale for a war with Iraq that this week logged its 2,000th fatality.

"This case is bigger than the leak of highly classified information," said Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the Democratic leader. "It is about how the Bush White House manufactured and manipulated intelligence in order to bolster its case for the war in Iraq, and to discredit anyone who dared to challenge the president."

Because the case involves the intersection of politics and the press, the day sometimes had a hall-of-mirrors element. At one point, Mr. Cheney's onetime press secretary, Pete Williams of NBC News, asked Mr. Fitzgerald how the prosecutor could take the word of "three reporters" (including his current bureau chief and boss, Tim Russert) "versus the vice president's chief of staff," with whom Mr. Williams served in the Pentagon when Mr. Cheney was secretary of defense in the first Bush administration.

"What I'll say is, we're comfortable proceeding," Mr. Fitzgerald replied.

Mr. Fitzgerald several times took pains to note that Mr. Libby was entitled to the presumption of innocence. But the formal legal language of the indictment has an inescapably damning tone. It charges that Mr. Libby "did knowingly and corruptly endeavor to influence, obstruct and impede the due administration of justice," by "misleading and deceiving the grand jury as to when, and the manner and means by which, Libby acquired and subsequently disclosed to the media information concerning the employment of Valerie Wilson by the C.I.A."

The Wilson affair is not Watergate, and Mr. Libby's alleged misdeed may seem small potatoes compared with the work of the Nixon-era White House "plumbers."

But the chain of events that led to this indictment is not entirely unlike the one that prompted the Nixon White House to try to discredit Daniel Ellsberg, the former Pentagon analyst who provided reporters with the secret government history detailing the growth of American involvement in Vietnam that came to be known as the Pentagon Papers. In that case, as in this, a White House sought to cast doubt on a critic of its foreign policy, only to enmesh itself in far deeper political and legal trouble by trying to hush up its efforts.

Mr. Fitzgerald used a homey baseball metaphor to explain why he had charged Mr. Libby with deception and obstruction, despite his inability to find evidence of an underlying crime in exposing Ms. Wilson's identity. He likened the situation to the beaning of a batter in a baseball game, with his job as prosecutor to determine whether the pitcher meant to "throw it under his chin" or simply let a bad pitch get away. In the end, the prosecutor said of Mr. Libby, "if you're asking me what his motives were, I can't tell you."

For his part, Mr. Bush vowed to "remain wholly focused on the many issues and opportunities facing this country," and added: "I got a job to do." Mr. Libby issued a statement through his lawyer expressing confidence that he would be exonerated.

Meantime, the media and legal machinery of scandal, at once familiar and unsettling, grinds on. By nightfall, CNN was replaying clips from Jan. 22, 2001, of Mr. Cheney swearing in a roomful of fresh-faced White House aides, all of whom vowed to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution, under whose powers and protections Mr. Libby was indicted.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (257521)10/29/2005 3:18:51 PM
From: Road Walker  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 1573092
 
Who's on First?
By MAUREEN DOWD
WASHINGTON

It was bracing to see the son of a New York doorman open the door on the mendacious Washington lair of the Lord of the Underground.

But this Irish priest of the law, Patrick Fitzgerald, neither Democrat nor Republican, was very strict, very precise. He wasn't totally gratifying in clearing up the murkiness of the case, yet strangely comforting in his quaint black-and-white notions of truth and honor (except when his wacky baseball metaphor seemed to veer toward a "Who's on first?" tangle).

"This indictment's not about the propriety of the war," he told reporters yesterday in his big Eliot Ness moment at the Justice Department. The indictment was simply about whether the son of an investment banker perjured himself before a grand jury and the F.B.I.

Scooter does seem like a big fat liar in the indictment. And not a clever one, since his deception hinged on, of all people, the popular monsignor of the trusted Sunday Church of Russert. Does Scooter hope to persuade a jury to believe him instead of Little Russ?

Good luck.

There is something grotesque about Scooter's hiding behind the press with his little conspiracy, given that he's part of an administration that despises the press and tried to make its work almost impossible.

Mr. Fitzgerald claims that Mr. Libby hurt national security by revealing the classified name of a C.I.A. officer. "Valerie Wilson's friends, neighbors, college classmates had no idea she had another life," he said.

He was not buying the arguments on the right that Mrs. Wilson was not really undercover or was under "light" cover, or that blowing her cover did not hurt the C.I.A.

"I can say that for the people who work at the C.I.A. and work at other places, they have to expect that when they do their jobs that classified information will be protected," he said, adding: "They run a risk when they work for the C.I.A. that something bad could happen to them, but they have to make sure that they don't run the risk that something bad is going to happen to them from something done by their own fellow government employees."

To protect a war spun from fantasy, the Bush team played dirty. Unfortunately for them, this time they Swift-boated an American whose job gave her legal protection from the business-as-usual smear campaign.

The back story of this indictment is about the ongoing Tong wars of the C.I.A., the White House, the State Department and the Pentagon: the fight over who lied us into war. The C.I.A., after all, is the agency that asked for a special prosecutor to be appointed to investigate how one of its own was outed by the White House.

The question Mr. Fitzgerald repeatedly declined to answer yesterday - Dick Cheney's poker face has finally met its match - was whether this stops at Scooter.

No one expects him to "flip," unless he finally gets the sort of fancy white-collar criminal lawyer that The Washington Post said he is searching for - like the ones who succeeded in getting Karl Rove off the hook, at least for now - and the lawyer tells Scooter to nail his boss to save himself.

But what we really want to know, now that we have the bare bones of who said what to whom in the indictment, is what they were all thinking there in that bunker and how that hothouse bred the idea that the way out of their Iraq problems was to slime their critics instead of addressing the criticism. What we really want to know, if Scooter testifies in the trial, and especially if he doesn't, is what Vice did to create the spidery atmosphere that led Scooter, who seemed like an interesting and decent guy, to let his zeal get the better of him.

Mr. Cheney, eager to be rid of the meddlesome Joe Wilson, got Valerie Wilson's name from the C.I.A. and passed it on to Scooter. He forced the C.I.A. to compromise one of its own, a sacrifice on the altar of faith-based intelligence.

Vice spent so much time lurking over at the C.I.A., trying to intimidate the analysts at Langley into twisting the intelligence about weapons, that he should have had one of his undisclosed locations there.

This administration's grand schemes always end up as the opposite. Officials say they're promoting national security when they're hurting it; they say they're squelching terrorists when they're breeding them; they say they're bringing stability to Iraq when the country's imploding. (The U.S. announced five more military deaths yesterday.)

And the most dangerous opposite of all: W. was listening to a surrogate father he shouldn't have been listening to, and not listening to his real father, who deserved to be listened to.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (257521)10/29/2005 4:00:10 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1573092
 
Either way, the fact that Libby wasn't actually indicted for the leak itself probably means that there won't be anything else, much to the disappointment of those who want to see Rove, Cheney, and Bush indicted, convicted, and locked up.

Impeached and removed from office will do.



To: Tenchusatsu who wrote (257521)10/30/2005 10:03:44 PM
From: SilentZ  Respond to of 1573092
 
>The latest "nuance" ... perjury is OK if you're trying to cover-up something that isn't against the law.

No... there's a difference between OK and "not that bad."

-Z